HR-Expertin verrät: Das passiert, wenn man sich ein zweites Mal auf die gleiche Stelle bewirbt

Mikel Arteta insists Arsenal can ‘do something special’ to overturn 1-0 deficit in return leg in Paris.
Here’s all the news to know as your start start your day.
Senator Abba Moro has criticised the PDP for choosing Ifeanyi Okowa as Vice Presidential candidate in the 2023 election, calling it a political miscalculation.
CHICAGO — Cleveland Browns coach Kevin Stefanski said it best when addressing the story of the defensive coordinator’s 21-year-old son who pranked quarterback Shedeur Sanders on draft day by pretending to be an NFL general manager.
A new investigation shows how a once pristine Indonesian island was sacrificed for global battery supply chains.
Assumable mortgages offer a rare win-win in real estate, helping buyers get cheaper monthly payments and sellers score higher prices on their homes.
A prime NHL head coaching candidate hit the market on Monday morning and he’s got strong Boston ties.
President Trump has dismissed hundreds of scientists working on the congressionally mandated National Climate Assessment, raising concerns about whether the void will be filled with pseudoscience
"The grief was so enormous. I don't blame anybody for grieving to that extent, I get it," Kelsey Grammer tells Newsweek about the 1975 murder of his sister, Karen.
With tighter margins and high-profile candidates, these smaller races are drawing the most attention this election.
MANILA, Philippines (AP) — The Philippines signed a military pact with New Zealand Wednesday, allowing their forces to hold joint exercises as Manila continues to build security alliances as it
Here is a roundup of stories from The Canadian Press designed to bring you up to speed...
BERLIN (AP) — Germany’s center-left Social Democrats have voted to approve a coalition agreement. The vote’s results were announced Wednesday. It paves the way to elect Friedrich Merz as the new German chancellor.
Shocking footage captured by a passenger on a flight shows the moment that flight attendants were forced to restrain a woman after she attempted to break into the cockpit.
The remarkable story of how British culture was transformed by émigré architects, filmmakers and writers The Englishness of English Art sounds like something a parish-pump little Englander might like to bang on about, but it is in fact the title of an arresting study by the German Jewish émigré Nikolaus Pevsner. “Neither English-born nor English-bred,” as he put it in his foreword, he nevertheless pinned down with startling precision the qualities that characterised English art and architecture: a rather twee preference for cuteness and compromise, for frills and fripperies. This shouldn’t surprise us. Newcomers are typically better placed than natives when it comes to deciphering unwritten social codes. Unencumbered by textbook propaganda and excessive knowledge, the stranger’s-eye view very often has the merit of freshness, even originality. Bertolt Brecht dubbed this the Verfremdungseffekt, or alienation effect, from which Owen Hatherley takes his title. Continue reading...
These are some of the people ensnared by the administration’s unprecedented measures to target people it believes oppose its agenda Donald Trump retook the White House vowing to stage “the largest deportation operation in American history”. As previewed, the administration set about further militarizing the US-Mexico border and targeting people requesting asylum and refugees while conducting raids and deportations in undocumented communities, detaining and deporting immigrants and spreading fear. Critics are outraged, if not surprised. But few expected the new legal chapter that unfolded next: a multipronged crackdown on certain people seen as opponents of the US president’s ideological agenda. This extraordinary assault has come in the context of wider attacks on higher education, the courts and the constitution. Continue reading...
The Myanmar military has been accused of hoarding life-saving relief while survivors endure soaring heat, disease, and displacement in earthquake-shattered Myanmar.
The ruling thus has limited what was once thought to be an unfettered competence of the member states in the realm of citizenship. Our reading of the ECJ ruling is that the stature of EU citizenship, which only exists as a result of citizenship derived from the 27 member states, has been elevated